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Nature Notes
HEYSHOTT NATURE NOTES
Editor – Nick Sherwin
May 2027
‘O Nightingale that on yon bloomy spray
Warbl’st at eve, when all the woods are still…
Now timely sing, ere the rude bird of hate
Foretell my hopeless doom, in some grove now’
Milton’s Ode to a Nightingale is nowadays less well known than that of Keats, which is perhaps a shame. For the Keats poem, with its lament ‘Thou was not born for death, immortal Bird!’, ends presciently, and depressingly, with ‘Fled isnthat music’. Fled indeed it is from our part of the South Downs, and more and more restricted to its stronghold in East Sussex and Kent.
The Milton poem focuses on superstition, and in particular the bad luckpotentially faced by the lover who hears the ‘rude bird of fate’ before hearing the first Nightingale of the season. This rude bird of fate was the Cuckoo, a reference to the unpleasantries of its parasitic nature. A Cuckoo was heard on Heyshott Common on 21 April, and this would perhaps suggest that Heyshott lovers have a good deal of bad luck in store, this and every year.
But we can perhaps now put this old superstition safely in the ‘historic’ box and merely celebrate the return of a Cuckoo as a harbinger of Spring. Nowadays in Heyshott, the rude bird of fate is much more likely to be taken as a characterisation of one of our corvid species, and possibly of the largest one of all, the Raven.
The fortunes of our Ravens have been the opposite of those of our Nightingales. The Sussex breeding population of Ravens became extinct in Sussex in the late 19th century, with occasional sightings between then and the 1990s probably being visitors from families hanging on on the Isle of Wight. But as persecution diminished in the late 20th century, Ravens returned to suitable habitat on our Downs. This year, in the same week of April as a Cuckoo was heard, a group of 16 Ravens was seen on and above Heyshott Down.
Ravens are early nesters and fledging is taking place earlier in the year, indeed as early as late April. But those fledglings will not be able to fly for a fortnight, so the group of 16 will likely comprise several adult family groups flying together, suggesting that larger groups still will be seen later in the year. As he population continues to grow, it is more than possible that Heyshott will become a location for communal winter roosts of Ravens, sited alongside those of its Jackdaws and Rooks.
There will be many who will lament that the celebrated song of the Nightingale has been replaced in Heyshott by the croak of the Raven. But visually, might the majestic sight of 16 soaring Ravens be more uplifting than a snatched sighting of a small brown bird warbling at eve, not from a bloomy spray, but from deep within a bramble thicket???
April 2026
There are said to be over 60 species of ant living in the UK. This is already too much information, for many are localised and many are introduced. Surveys on the Murray Downland Trust reserves have identified 10 species as present, and the species best known in our village will be the Black Garden Ant, thousands of which emerge on the wing in our gardens in mid summer.
However, the best identifiers for some of the oldest grassland in Heyshott are the anthills of colonies of Yellow Meadow Ants. Some of these anthills are centuries old. Yet the ants themselves are seldom seen, rarely appearing above ground.
These ants are a closely related species to our familiar garden ants. Their dining habits are similar also, with a penchant for the honeydew produced by aphids which they are able to ‘farm’ for the purpose. In winter they may eat the aphids themselves. They forage below the surface and if one is seen above ground, it is usually a queen seeking a new nest site.
This underground foraging leads to the creation of nests which are pushed up and then dot across suitable grassland. This activity creates what could be considered as a separate habitat from the surrounding thicker grasses. The hillock tops are dryer, and this enables smaller flora such as wild thyme to survive with less completion from the thicker grasses elsewhere. This can attract specialist invertebrates, such as the Chalk Hill Blue butterfly, a late flying butterfly seen on Heyshott Escarpment in mid to late summer and reliant upon Horse Shoe Vetch and some other low growing members of the pea family as foodstuff for its larvae.
The hillocks also attract rabbits for use as latrines, perhaps indirectly further enhancing the localised flora. The grass covering to the anthills provides the ants with a degree of protection from predators. But predators there are, both mining bees and wasps and also our misnamed Green Woodpeckers, better known for their searching for ants on the ground than for their wood pecking and better named by their onomatopoeic ‘Yaffle’.
When it comes to defence, the meadow ants have no sting. For this reason they are often recommended as a suitable ant to keep as pets in order to study the operation of a colony. But this is somewhat simplistic, for the absence of a sting is made up for the presence of a bite which is supplemented by the production of formic acid. The combination is by nomeans pleasant, and if an emergent colony is disturbed by an enthusiastic gardener they are best left alone.
March 2026
The incessant rain which has dominated the year to date will it seems continue into March, further restricting the activities of work parties on Heyshott Scarp and dampening many of our New Year ambitions. But the rain indicates mildness and that mildness will have assisted many of our songbirds in surviving the winter. Dartford Warbler numbers on the heaths should show an increase this year, and the breeding success of our commonest songbirds is already being indicated by the volume of early February birdsong – particularly that of Robins, Wrens, Song Thrushes and Greenfinches – around the village.
Our January and February weather will be missed by our migrant birds but will still have an impact on them insofar as it will have affected the emergence of the invertebrates on which they need to feed both themselves and their young. The timing of the migrants’ arrivals will depend upon the weather patterns in, and the wind direction from, countries to the south of us in the coming months. But what might we typically expect to see and hear in Heyshott in March?
The earliest of our warblers to arrive back to our village will usually be Chiffchaffs and Blackcaps, returning from their wintering grounds in West Africa. By the third week of March, there should be regular sightings of each in Heyshott (early Blackcaps favour our Mistletoe) and the song of each should be commonplace by the end of the month. But the migrating patterns of each of these species are changing – more of our Chiffchaffs and Blackcaps are remaining in the UK as mild winters become the norm, and some Blackcaps are now migrating from mainland Europe to the UK for the winter and leaving the UK as our regular migrants return.
Our Garden Warblers and Grasshopper Warblers typically overwinter further south in West Africa and arrive somewhat later than our Chiffchaffs and Blackcaps. They are shyer birds, rarely seen on their migration which in all likelihood will be shrouded by the night, but a Garden Warbler – distinguished rather by its plainness and the absence of distinguishing features – has been seen in Heyshott as early as the third week of March. Our hedge loving Whitethroats typically arrive in April but one or two may be scraping out their song in the hedgerows by the end of March.
Our Tree Pipits winter further south in woodland in sub-Saharan West Africaand our Barn Swallows travel even further into South Africa. Our breeding pipits and swallows are unlikely to arrive as soon as March, but Heyshott is a stopping point for birds travelling further north and we should expect to see swallows in the village before the month is out. We will then feel with confidence that Spring has truly arrived even if the formal advice is ‘ne’er to cast a clout for another couple of months.
January- February 2026
A member of the Murray Downland Trust made a gift to the Trust at its annual talk in November in the Cobden Hall. The gift was of 6 Elm saplings, for planting on the MDT’s reserves. The donor, Dr Richard Smith, is a retired arboriculturalist and an expert in the provenance of surviving Elms in the United Kingdom. It is of course well known that virtually all mature Elms in the UK died in or after the 1970s following their infestation with a disease that became known as Dutch Elm disease. The disease is a fungus spread by a bark beetle. Smaller Elms survive within hedgerows – indeed, there are many in Heyshott – but these would fall victim to the disease if allowed to grow to their full height.
There are two species of Elm which are generally considered native to the UK, the English Elm and the Wych Elm. Both are susceptible to Dutch Elm disease, which was named after the country in which it was originated rather than a particular species which it might attack. The English Elm bears little if no resistance, and this is now thought to be because of its lack of genetic diversity – all specimens are now thought to descend from one individual introduced to the UK in Roman times (making the term English Elm a probable misnomer and casting doubt on the designation as ‘native’), with reproduction being by suckering rather than
seed production. Wych Elm does produce seed which has led to a degree of genetic diversity enabling some mature specimens to survive attack. But mature English Elms can only survive by avoiding attack in the first place; pockets of individuals still hang on in Kent and East Sussex where the spread of disease is limited by the treeless features of the eastern end of our South Downs.
The taxonomy of Elms is however by no means straightforward. There are up to 30 species of Elm north of the Equator, half a dozen of which are European. Eighteenth century gardeners revelled in hybridisation; one well known hybrid is the Chichester Elm, named after Chichester Hall in Essex but with a legitimate West Sussex connection as Chichester Hall was at one point owned by the then Bishop of Chichester. The Elms donated to the MDT are hybrids, deriving from a mature specimen which appears to be thriving in Cocking.
This complexity creates a challenge for the MDT. The clay soils within the Heyshott reserves would potentially provide a suitable home for hybrid Elms,but it would be a curious choice for a grassland conservation charity to seek to plant hybrid specimens within an SSSI even if Natural England were to permit this. So it is likely that the saplings will leave Heyshott, and will probably find a home in the Trust’s newest reserve at Hurston Warren where there is a mosaic of habitat to manage outside the heathland SSSI.
December 2025
Keen arachnophiles will have spotted a story reported by the BBC and the Times that a species of spider last seen on the UK in the 1980s has been rediscovered at the same site on the Isle of Wight. This spider is known as the White-knuckled Wolf Spider and is the only UK species of the genus ‘Aulonia’.
It is however only distinguishable from a species of a different genus (one of the so-called ‘Otter Spiders’) by the white patella of its pedipalp (i.e. it has white dots on the kneecaps of its forward appendages). The spider is approximately 4 mm long and was found on part of a National Trust reserve only accessible by boat; the story perhaps typifies the single mindedness needed to be a spider recorder.
One of the two ‘finders’, Graeme Lyons, is known to many in Heyshott. He has carried out invertebrate and fauna surveys on the Heyshott reserves of the Murray Downland Trust and has given talks on his survey results in the Cobden Hall. Unfortunately for Heyshott, Graeme now regards the rediscovery of this wolf spider on the Island as the likely highlight of his career, but that is not to say that the population of spiders at Heyshott is other than remarkable.
The Murray Downland Trust first commissioned a survey of the spider populations on Heyshott Escarpment and Heyshott Down in 2008. 101 different species were identified, covering an enormous range of crab spiders, jumping spiders, wolf spiders, and web weavers, including trapdoor weavers and some woodlice specialists and ant specialists. There seems however to be one common feature, which is that spiders, whatever their mode of collecting their prey, are opportunist ‘wait and see’ predators. Unlike many insects, spiders are not generally associated with particular plants; they are usually generalist predators and, from a management perspective, ospiders will thrive the more abundant and varied the insect population on which they feed. The wider the variety of flora, the greater the availability of insects and the healthier the populations of spiders will be.
Graeme’s latest survey in 2022 covered all the Murray Downland Trust reserves and identified 119 different species of spider. 17 of these species had ‘conservation status’, but Graeme’s work across Sussex and beyond has shown that many of these ‘statuses’ are often out of date or misleading – many species which are described as Nationally Scarce can be locally common. But some are clearly not, and two Heyshott examples in particularwere exciting finds:
• Araneus alsine , known as the strawberry spider,
is restricted to bogs in northern Scotland and limited areas in southern England; it is an orb web spider spinning webs with a closed hubs in low vegetation. Its specked orangey coloration is highly distinctive and justifies its common name.
• Phaeocedus braccatus is a rare ground spider generally only found on chalk grassland in just a few areas in the South of England. It is the only UK species in its genus and, unlike most ground spiders, is diurnal. At first sight it resembles and moves like an ant, but no ant has such a distinctive patterning of three pairs of white spots on its abdomen.
November 2025
The results of the 2025 Wealden Heaths Breeding Bird Survey were published in September, narrowly beating the publication by the Sussex Ornithological Society’s Sussex Bird Report for 2024, demonstrating the speed of distribution of on-line results over hard copy publications which we now take for granted.
The heathland survey covers 10 Wealden Heaths including Heyshott and Ambersham Commons and focuses on 5 priority species, those of Nightjar, Woodlark, Dartford Warbler, Tree Pipit and Stonechat. Once again the survey shows that Heyshott and Ambersham have the largest number of Nightjar territories, with 19 out of the 77 territories across the heaths. This population of Nightjars appears stable year on year and so there is every expectation of the return of our birds next Spring. The mean arrival date in Sussex is 8 May and dusk walks next June can be expected to be rewarded with churring birds.
A story less often told is that Heyshott and Ambersham Commons also hold the greatest population of Dartford Warblers across the heaths, with a total of 10 breeding territories. Dartford Warblers are a bell weather species in the UK; they are primarily birds of the Iberian Peninsula and the southern Mediterranean, and southern England is at the extreme northern end of their range. Unlike our Nightjars, they do not migrate and are are therefore very exposed to harsh winters; they experienced a severe population crash in 2010 and 2011, since when their numbers have steadily increased and can be expected to increase further as our mean temperatures continue to rise.
They are distinctive warblers, easily identified by their long slender tails and grey heads and their quick rattling warble; they can produce up to 3 broods between April and July, nesting low down in the gorse or the heather. Heyshott and Ambersham Commons do not top the table for the other 3 target species, although the small numbers of Woodlark and Stonechat appear stable. Tree Pipit is the only one of the target species where numbers have declined significantly across Sussex in recent years, and the survey indicates that there were only 2 breeding territories of Tree Pipit in our local common this year (Woolbeding Common topped the table with 7 territories). This is intriguing, for it indicates that the population of Tree Pipits on the relatively small reserve on the top of Heyshott Down is now greater than that across our local heathland. Are these different families, or has thepopulation moved to a habitat which might be more suitable? It has not proved possible to graze Heyshott Down in 2025 owing to local TB concerns, but its grassland has been mechanically cut on rotation and the presence of isolated tall trees for song posts and display appears particularly suited to our red listed Tree Pipits. The Murray Downland Trust is already eagerly anticipating their return next April.
October 2025
The indications from nationwide counts are that this summer, warm and dry, has been a good one for our native butterflies, with the numbers of some species more than double those for 2024. There is no reason to suppose that this has not been reflected more broadly amongst our invertebrates and an increased number of invertebrates may explain some unusual sightings of breeding insectivores in Heyshott this summer.
The Garden Warbler is misnamed, for it is rare that it breeds in gardens. It has appeared in this column before, as an early migrant appearing in Heyshott much earlier in the Spring than usually reported in Sussex. It is seldom seen, usually only recognised by its throaty song heard from deep thicket reminiscent of, but somewhat more evenly paced, than the urgent warbling of the Blackcap. But is is a bird which breeds in Heyshott and was noticeable in a Heyshott garden in this year’s breeding season.
The Garden Warbler is best identified by its lack of features – a bird which is uniformly buff, has no eye
stripe and has no wing bar enables one to exclude other species of warbler. More unusual was the confirmed breeding of a Grasshopper Warbler in an (admittedly scrubby) Heyshott garden. The Grasshopper Warbler is not thought of as a garden bird and indeed is generally not thought of as a Sussex bird, with few recorded breedings in the county. Unlike the Garden Warbler, it is however a distinctive bird, recognisable both by its large rounded paddle of a tail and also by its behaviour – the Grasshopper Warbler is a ground nester and if startled will typically drop down to the ground and make its escape from perceived danger by hopping rather than flying. Its name derives from its song rather than its behaviour, and in countries where the sound of crickets is more widespread than in the UK it’s song can often be mistaken for that of a hopper.
Perhaps even more welcome is the confirmed breeding of a Spotted Flycatcher in Heyshott, behind Bakersfield (photo courtesy Furse Simpson).
Residents of a certain age will remember when the Spotted Fly was a common garden breeding bird throughout England, choosing unusual nest sites such as car ports and showing off its fly catching technique returning to the same perch after a successful hunt. Alas no more, for populations of this bird across the UK have declined by approximately two-thirds since the early 1990s and the number of breeding territories in Sussex has now probably reduced well below 500. This decline is thought to owe more to conditionsin its Central African wintering grounds rather than here, but its reappearance in Heyshott is an indication of woodland in good condition and perhaps also a reduction of numbers of squirrels and other predators.
September 2025
Bats are newsworthy. Expensive ‘bat tunnels’ receive widespread criticism. His Majesty’s Government considers that bats are over protected and impede development; it has suggested that a solution to its concerns would be to develop a list of UK only protected species. It is assumed that this list will be smaller than the current list of protected species and will reduce occasions when conservation concerns hold up planning processes. One wonders whether this assumption is accurate and, even if it is, whether it is right to be isolationist if and when the UK holds significant populations of species which are threatened across Europe.
18 species of bat have been recorded in Sussex. In recent years, the discoveries of populations of Greater Mouse-eared Bats and of Greater Horseshoe Bats in West Sussex have each been deemed worthy of nationwide attention on the BBC website, on the basis that these are amongst the UK’s rarest mammals (and would presumably therefore retain their status on a UK only list of protected species). Here in Heyshott, we live within 5 km of Cocking and Singleton Tunnels, a site designated as a Special Area of Conservation because of the presence of Barbastelle and Bechstein’s Bats. The latter species is considered to be the rarest bat in Western Europe.
If one has a summer dusk ramble in Heyshott with a bat detector (every home, especially one with children, should have one!) set to 45kHz, one has a good chance of picking up the echolocation sounds of one of the UK’s commoner bats, the Common Pipistrelle. This tiny Pipistrelle, perhaps 40mm long and weighing only 5g, will fly at head height seeking invertebrates around our buildings and along our hedge lines and woodland edges. The increased seeding of wildflower meadows should increase (and in Heyshott probably already is increasing) invertebrate populations and in consequence increase our Pipistrelle populations; a Pipistrelle will eat thousands of invertebrates on each flight from its roost.
With a little good fortune, one might on reducing the frequency of the detector pick up one of our rarer bats. Heyshott is certainly within the foraging range of the Cocking Barbastelles, and these medium sized, pug-nosed bats have indeed been heard in Heyshott at a setting of about 32kHz. Reducing the setting further to about 25kHz gives a greater possibility of picking up one of our larger bats, the Serotine Bat.
This bat is half as large again as a Common Pipistrelle and perhaps 5 times its weight. It is an early riser, and so the size differential between the two species can be noted on the wing before dark closes in, at which point one might perhaps put away the bat detector for the evening and admire the speed and dexterity of these remarkable mammals.
August 2025
There are two ways of looking at nature. One is to search, the other is to let nature come to you. In a Heyshott context, one can either go out or stay in…
This column predicted in January 2023 that ‘It will not be long before there is a spotting of a White-tailed Eagle within the parish boundaries of Heyshott’. It was perhaps always likely that this prediction would be fulfilled by someone venturing out rather than staying in. And so it was, the accompanying photo (courtesy Henrietta Brailsford)
showing an eagle about to cross Heyshott Down in May. This will have been one of the birds released on the Isle of Wight under the reintroduction programme, and it is becoming clear that the south-east of England is becoming an important wandering ground for unpaired birds. Indeed the South Downs can now be seen as local to their Isle of Wight home – the latest blog on the Roy Dennis Wildlife Foundation website shows the results from a satellite tag mapping the route one bird took to Normandy and back in the Spring, having already visited France last year. Henrietta reports that her eagle was mobbed by buzzards and kites on its visit to Heyshott – it seems no time since Red Kites were themselves first seen in Heyshott being mobbed by corvids as they extended their range from their own reintroduction sites in the Chilterns in the 1990s.
One might also have thought that if one wanted to see a Peregrine Falcon in Heyshott, one might be better venturing to the top of the Down rather than staying at home. Not so, it would seem, for in July one such falcon has been seen visiting gardens in both the east and the west of the village. It is possible that this is one of the birds which have nested on Chichester Cathedral, for it has been reported that they successfully fledged 2 chicks in June. But is is perhaps more likely that this is an unpaired young bird seeking out a new territory. There are thought to be over 30 pairs of Peregrines in Sussex and these are indeed highly territorial. To quote from the Sussex Ornithological Society’s work on the Birds of Sussex :
‘The Peregrine has often been witnessed aggressively defending its territory from others of its species. As the population has expanded, this has been observed with increasing frequency in Sussex and several Peregrine corpses showing wounds associated with fighting have been recovered’.
One such corpse was retrieved on Heyshott Escarpment at the start of a Wednesday morning winter work party approximately 10 years ago. One can only hope that the bird which is currently making Heyshott its home does not meet a similarly grisly end.
July 2025
This column has previously noted the presence of Lousewort on the Village Green outside the Old Rectory. Lousewort is an attractive low growing, semi parasitical perennial which flowers throughout the summer and because of its low growth, its flowering is likely to have survived the Green’s current cutting regime which is designed to reduce the prevalence of rushes.
However, the past month has been a good one for full parasites in Heyshott. Specifically hundreds of spikes of Common Broomrape (photo courtesy Chris Holmes) have been seen in the fields around Manor Farm. Common Broomrape is entirely parasitical on the roots of plants of the pea family, particularly thriving in fields rich in clover, and so can thrive without possessing any chlorophyll.
Another species of Broomrape, Ivy Broomrape, is rarer but can be found locally on chalk soils, though itsnative range is thought to be west of the Isle of Wight; the flowers of Ivy Broomrape stand more upright than those of Common Broomrape, and sometimes lack its purplish tinge, instead showing a pure yellow coloration.
The longer Orchid Walk which took place as part of the village Cream Tea event in early June produced great excitement with the apparent find of a Bird’s-nest Orchid. This is an orchid of almost mythical status on Heyshott Scarp, with no-one claiming to have seen one but several villagers having being told over the years that others have. It is an orchid which lacks chlorophyll, feeding instead as an epiparasite on fungus under ancient trees, particularly Beech. However, on further examination after the walk, this lonesome spike, duly growing under an old Beech, appears not to have been an orchid at all; rather it is a spike of another fungal parasite with a not dissimilar name, that of Yellow Bird’s-nest (photo courtesy John Murray). This strange plant, sometimes known as the Dutchman’s Pipe, is the only member of its family found in Europe and is no less rare than the Bird’s-nest Orchid. Its flowers are however tubular, lacking the upper lobes of an orchid, whilst the flowers of Bird’s-nest Orchid are more closely packed.
Heyshott is of course well known for its orchids, and it is perhaps a shamethat a new find cannot yet safely be added to the 13 species shown in the handout given to those attending the June orchid walk. On the other hand, the intriguing life cycle of our village parasites perhaps adds even more to the charm of our local flora.
June 2025
Our village cream teas on the afternoon of Sunday 8 June offer the option of an Orchid Walk. Of the 13 or so orchid species regularly seen on Heyshott Escarpment, perhaps 7 or 8 will be in flower in early June, so walkers should not be disappointed. But an Orchid Walk on Heyshott Escapment in latish Spring can offer much. more than orchids. In particular some of our most iconic butterflies should be on the wing.
Heyshott Scarp is of course best known for its rare Duke of Burgundy butterflies, which will at their peak numbers in late May and early June. They are however best found on a dedicated hunt, exploring the warm bowls higher up the Scarp than the gentle Orchid Walks will lead. It would be preferable to set aside a sunny afternoon for this purpose. A better focus might be to keep one’s eyes peeled for a streak of green. For our only resident green butterfly, the Green Hairstreak,
is also at its peak numbers in early June. The numbers of Green Hairsteaks have been reducing in the western downs, but nevertheless it is not a rare butterfly. Rather, it is rarely noticed, for its coloration is a strong camouflage, its flight is fast and difficult to follow and, once found, it is surprisingly small. The upper wings of the butterfly are in fact a shiny brown, but it settles with wings closed showing off its vibrant green underwings, which contrast with striking black and white striped legs and antennae.
The Green Hairstreak has one of the widest ranges of food plants for its larvae of any British butterfly, and for this reason it is widely spread, regularly visiting Heyshott gardens. Two of those food plants are Dogwood and Bird’s-foot-trefoil, both of which are plentiful on Heyshott Scarp and well worth an inspection on a Spring walk. With luck one might find a pair of males fighting dramatically over their territories on the lower sunnier edges of scrub.
The Green Hairstreak is one of four butterflies in the Hairstreak family which fly in Sussex. The White-letter Hairsteak is genuinely rare, understandably so in the light of its association with our disease ravagedElm trees. The Brown Hairstreak and the Purple Hairsteak cannot claim to be rare butterflies, but neither is often seen. The Brown Hairstreak emerges in late summer from the Blackthorn hedges where it lays its eggs; the Blackthorn around the village pond might offer the best chance to see an adult, but there is a noticeably better chance of finding its distinctive eggs, which have been likened to Sea Urchins, on Blackthorn in early winter than spotting the adult in flight. The Purple Hairstreak flys in the summer months but spends most of its life on the canopy of our Oak trees where it is active in the early evening. The best chance to see one is to scour the top of an Oak through binoculars at dusk in July, but they will come down looking for water in times of drought. Again therefore our village pond may offer the best opportunity to see one when water is scarce; indeed Purple Hairstreaks can get into difficulty flying too low to the surface and withluck one may find an opportunity to rescue a Purple Hairstreak.